Until now, ghost hunters relied on modern equipment and high-tech gadgetry to hunt spirits and then attempt in-depth background research by plodding through low-tech methods and tedious trips to libraries, historical societies and archives. No more plodding! Now, computer friendly, in-depth research can be accomplished on a 24/7 basis, because the Ghost Hunters Research Guide to Free Internet Sources provides exact Internet addresses and precise tutorials for using dozens of free, legal and public Internet sites that have the information paranormal investigators need: When and where a person died. Locate graves and cemeteries. Find nicknames, abbreviations, name translations and origins. Communicate in the vocabulary of the ghost. Read and date old-style handwriting. Research shipwrecks and natural disasters. Access the life of a ghost in the U.S. Census: 1790 to 1940. Ghosts that are African, Slave, Freedmen, Immigrant and Indentured Servant. Lumberjack, Pirate, Waiter or Witch? Occupations and associations. Get the facts about haunted or stigmatized property. Determine a ghost’s wealth and lifestyle. Apparition or Hallucination? Facts on drugs, medication, food and lifestyle interactions. Client’s personal history records. Does your client have a hidden agenda? Ownership and tax history of haunted property. … And more. Access and how-to use these crucial Internet databanks is free and legal in the book: Ghost Hunters Research Guide to Free Internet Sources by Elizabeth Eagan-Cox. www.ElizabethEaganCox.net